This is a stop motion video of chronic starer (You got a problem, boy?!) and pianist Lord Vinheteiro performing Korsakov‘s ‘Flight of the Bumblebee’ with a single finger, his digit remaining motionless and only the keyboard moving. He says he spent 36 hours making and editing the one minute clip,
This is a video of stop-motion animator/self-proclaimed video wizard Kevin Parry recreating the Netflix intro using about $30 worth of yarn and three days’ time. Admittedly, impressive, although it would have been more impressive if he also managed to make the ‘TA-DUM’ sound effect out of yarn too. But the
This is a video of artist and flipbook maker dP Art Drawing (aka Trương) stop-motion flipping the incredible 1,400 page Iron Man versus Thanos flipbook he drew — the longest he’s ever made, spending over 736 hours on the project (some of which is seen in the video). According to
Because everybody’s used their time in quarantine differently (unless you’ve only played video games and eaten ridiculously high sodium microwavable meals, in which case, twinsies), this is a video of Youtuber Kevin Parry performing a very clever stop motion trampoline routine. I only wish I could have been there to
To pay tribute to the late, great rock star, this is a video created by stop motion animator Thomas J Yagodinski of a Jawa performing Van Halen’s ‘Eruption’ on a custom made 16-inch Frankenstrat. Thomas made both the Jawa and the miniature Frankenstrat for the video, which was a treat
From musician Jeremy Messersmith’s Mixtape For The Milky Way, this is the music video for ‘Video Games’, a song about growing up playing video games, and still playing video games, and what they meant to him then, and mean now. The music video created by Eric Power is fantastic, featuring
This is a basketball themed stop-motion video created by Instagrammer samuelgrubbs over the course of five days by getting sprayed with a hose while laying on the pavement to create a silhouette, then waiting for the water to evaporate, moving a little bit, and repeating the process. That seems like
This is a video of Youtuber LegoEddy discussing and exhibiting the Apollo 11 stop motion LEGO movie he made that was originally shot at 15 frames per second, which he then boosted to 60FPS using DAINAPP (Depth-Aware video frame INterpolation), a neural network that predicts new frames to increase the